Borzì R M, Piacentini A, Monaco M C, Lisignoli G, Degrassi A, Cattini L, Santi S, Facchini A
Laboratorio di Immunologia e Genetica, Istituto di Ricerca Codivilla Putti, I.O.R., Bologna, Italy.
J Immunol Methods. 1996 Jun 21;193(2):167-76. doi: 10.1016/0022-1759(96)00070-1.
In HIV+ patients, the presence of HIV-RNA in plasma and circulating cells has been reported to be a marker of progression but the percentage of transcriptionally active infected cells remains unclear. We have developed a reliable fluorescent in situ hybridization method for the detection of HIV specific RNA by flow cytometry. The procedure was applied to a panel of chronically infected cell lines and to an acutely infected cell line mimicking normal peripheral blood lymphocytes in susceptibility to HIV-1. The cells were fixed in suspension and hybridized by means of an HIV-1 genomic probe labeled with digoxigenin-11-dUTP. An FITC-labeled anti-digoxigenin antiserum was then applied and the resulting fluorescence signals were analyzed both by flow cytometry and confocal microscopy. Different procedures for double staining HIV-RNA together with virus induced proteins or surface markers were also developed. Flow cytometric detection of in situ hybridization offers the possibility of analyzing thousands of cells in a few seconds and of collecting multiparametric information at the single cell level, thus providing a potential tool for detecting the rare HIV-RNA expressing cells in peripheral blood samples.